#CreditWriters

You may have heard me rail about how strange it is that authors are so bad about crediting their fellow writers.

Consider this sentence: “The Washington Post says the special counsel is investigating Trump for possible obstruction of justice.” That’s wrong. The Post doesn’t say that, its writers do. The Washington Post–newly returned to us as a crucial journalistic voice, under the ownership of Amazon’s Jeff Bezos–has never written a single story. Neither has The New York Times. Nor the LA Times. Nor The Sunday Times, the Associated Press, Reuters, CNN, or your local medium of choice.

And when we share their work, or any other writer’s work from a blog, a book, a news article, a poem, an analysis or opinion piece, we should name them. When space is short in a tweet, I always advise folks to credit writers over their media. The Times and Post don’t need the retweets as much as the writers do: their viability on a newsroom staff may be gauged in part by just how much weight they have in the social space.

There’s that sermon, then. Go forth and #CreditWriters, amen.

#PicturesMeanBusiness

Sarah McIntyre

Next, consider the difficulty that many in the business have had in crediting illustrators, too, of all the preposterous things. Part of the issue here is metadata fields. It became apparent at one point that templates didn’t always have a place to fill in the name of an illustrator on a book, which is ridiculous. The last thing the industry expected was illustrators? Really?

That’s never been an excuse for publishers who don’t put the names of illustrators onto the covers of books with authors’ names. Especially in children’s work, these gaffes cripple illustrators’ careers, making it incredibly hard for them to attract editors and design directors looking for new illustration work.

Many publishers are trying to address this, and we can applaud them. Consciousness is rising, thanks to the campaign led from England by the Seattle-born author and illustrator (and energetic dresser) Sarah McIntyre. #PicturesMeanBusiness.